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Unequal Paths to Decarbonization in an Aging Society: A Multi-Scale Assessment of Japan’s Household Carbon Footprints

Yuzhuo Huang, Xiang Li () and Xiaoqin Guo
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Yuzhuo Huang: School of Business, Heze University, 2269 Daxue Road, Mudan District, Heze 274021, China
Xiang Li: School of Business, Heze University, 2269 Daxue Road, Mudan District, Heze 274021, China
Xiaoqin Guo: College of Politics and Law, Heze University, 2269 Daxue Road, Mudan District, Heze 274021, China

Sustainability, 2025, vol. 17, issue 12, 1-28

Abstract: Japan’s shift to a super-aged society is reshaping household carbon footprint (HCF) in ways that vary by age, income, and region. Drawing on a two-tier national–prefectural framework, we quantify the influence of demographic shifts on HCF and evaluate inequalities, and project prefectural HCF to 2050 under fixed 2005 technology and consumption baselines. Nationally, emissions follow an inverted-U age curve, peaking at the 50–54 s (2.16 tCO 2 ) and dropping at both the younger and older ends. Carbon inequality—the gap between high- and low-income households—displays the opposite U shape, being the widest below 30 and above 85. Regional HCF patterns add a further layer: while the inverted U persists, its peak shifts to the 60–64 s in high-income prefectures such as Tokyo—where senior emissions rise by 44% by 2050—and to the 45–49 s in low-income prefectures such as Akita, where younger age groups cut emissions by 58%. Although spatial carbon inequality narrows through midlife, it widens again in old age as eldercare and home energy needs grow. These findings suggest that a uniform mitigation trajectory overlooks key cohorts and regions. To meet the 2050 net-zero target, Japan should integrate age-, income-, and region-specific interventions—for example, targeted carbon pricing, green finance for middle-aged consumers, and less-urban low-carbon eldercare—into its decarbonization roadmap.

Keywords: aging society; household consumption; carbon footprint; carbon inequality; input–output analysis (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: O13 Q Q0 Q2 Q3 Q5 Q56 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2025
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